ito - phillipian archivespdf.phillipian.net/1973/01111973.pdf · 2008. 9. 9. · volu~e no. 97. 12...

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VOLU~E 97. NO. 12 PHILLIPS ACADEMY ANDOVER 'MASSACHU~ETTS JN AYl,17 Bronwell Ault, Andover, Trustee Hubr oSere sAumni Dire~iaor; Since 1953. Dies In New York ~~~~~~~Crawford Finbury T Fill Vacated Post Bromwell Ault, trustee ofPilp Aca:myU Inc2: 53 , die ontece:bert28 cagsfrnx er ~edatr ~nsrtv in New York City. Mr. Ault was 73. Inadm eiso AanAndover uteM.Alsevdacaianof the Comte nte cagsfrnx er datrTheclore Sizer Addison Gallery, and wsas an important member of the Educational Policy appointed Director of g Pacement Robert Ccommitt~e. Director of Developnient Frederick Stott com mented, "Along with Hulburd to scedCalsSmith as Alumni Secretary among them the faculty Leave of Absence policy and School Year Abroad. Assist'antDietro ollege Placem nt Robert IMr. Ault had two spnis who Crawford and Ab~ ege Guidance Counselor attended Andover, and his gandson Marion Finbr wil u~ed Mr. Hulbt rd as co- David AulIt is currently a PA- lower, directors or the Colleg e C~nseling Office. Mr. Smith Yale Medal wvill "handle sme special assignment"fo PA while After his graduation fromt Andover going into business- in Wolfboro, New,~ Han shire. iin 1918 and from Yale College in ,Leete ToRetire 1922. Mr,1 Ault became an executive In addition. Thomas B. P ole will become ssistant' to with the Inmort corporation. an ink Commons Director Rbbert ~eete. Mr. Poole' i'il assist in nmanufact rer. According to the New th prtoso omn nil h ieeto r 9 eas o i ntrs nLeete in two years. at whi~ time hie will ssume full in h p~of'dYale University to responsibility I'!?r the dinin~ hall.- Pu:ls he complete letters and Mr.PooeV s born-ind raised in Pittsburgh. Penn- o1s of' printer-turned -statesman sylvania. He at'tended Grove City College th~re for two BejminI Franklin. In 1971, Mr. Ault years and theni transfered Ito University o Pittsburgh. reci ed the Yale Medal for dist- After graduation hie beigame interested in fodl service niguished service by an alumnus. management. and since the hie has worked "; th the Hot TO OL In addition, to his service as a Shoppes, Motgrjnns, resta rants. and hotel asociated anaget Richard iggs %vill aid Bilsiness Manager trustee of Phillips Academy, Mr. Ault with the Mariod Corporati~ n. He hs also dvstlie rgeNielson as A~sistant Business Manager. was Director and President Emeritus Catholic University and Harvard Law SoodingA ademic Servicis ot'the Episcopal Church Foutidation halls. CrlnG di il i and retired chairman of the board ol Since Abbot Dean ol' Studies ~ ~ ~ ~ I~nstiut Lati and l RussianiaRoberbrt-Laneewill and retired chairman of the board of Since Abbot Dealt of' St dies Carolyn educedhis teachinghresponsibilities""too akeechargeeof trustees at St: John's College o RMWELAL assume many of Associate P-leadmasterSionHds a, bver-all study of t Andlover's "academic services" Annapolis. Maryjand.' and Santa Fe BRM EL UTtasks when she assumes te position ofDa fte shas h irr.t New Mexico. A~~~~~~bcademy next year. Mr. Hyd~e will "spendmr tim on ah teLanguage Lbratory. Rssian instructor A l ,~~~~~~~~~~-, f~~~~~~~~~i. ~~~~ long-range academic planniiiig and factyr rutmet Al son Stevens will scced Mr. Lane as Chairman of Aicademn R.eceives ,$ I23, l0-if t Registrar Willianm Bennett will go on eaeofabsence th Russian Dpartni nt'. next year. Abbot Assistant Deant of'Sunt James - Iirector olDvlp~etFrederickStt'tilwllb T hI~~~~~~~~J 7' r i ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Lvn~h will replace Mr. Bennett as Registr, r an'O will cha ged -to Secdretary 'the Academy. Mr. Stott will Dionated For ~eneral ur oses assume responsibilitv or school-wide socia activities, diret PA's AeVelopme'rt ~efforts including the Bicen- a trust fun prevtousl covered by Associate Dean Carroll ailey. Mr. te ena Program. In alditicin.M.totwlsevasP' Phillips Academy has received approximately SI123,191.8I fromtatutfn Baildv will become Deant of' th~l1 Abbot Cluster. representative f'or comn~unity affairs and will oversee all originally' founded by Oliver Murray. PA '07. who dlied o ovember 29. 1963. Andlover received the gift as "incomie for general purposes.'I Mrs. Murray lived The Registrar's Office will assume - t e rutine not~ tat te cangel la ore a matter of nomen- on the income of the trust fund until her death-the mon cy PA received was responsibilities ofthe Office of'Research and vauto. catiire'' than a change iatnresponisibilities. 20% of the remaining amount. Andover will add the monley to another hinld Director of' Research nd Evaluation Fredleric Peterson FewerOfie establihed by r. Murry. in eniory f his bother. IdnyM ury will chair a faculty committee on Research and Dr. Sizer explained tiat the administrative changes established by Mr. Murray, in memoEvaluaionowhiciwillothonridcrdndediret Murray'ecial ll.ilhophoeuulyy. bothhs ilifyookrwork andproperl Mr-. Murray. wvho attended PA for only one y ear. worked in the securitiesEvlai wchil"ondeaddrctshspcl acnoatif busineslf in Davenport. Iowa. where lie lived throughout his life. Director f studies asiseemi %~ise." n addition. Mr. Peterson wsill take cc odtilte load wh h al suybstan tally-larger student responsi ifity for Teaching Fellowv seminars and related body and the Bicentenn' a Program will impose on us Development Frederi~k Stott noted that' Mr. Murray "~maintained a friend ly fclyii trests in teacher training. -c uigte etfwyar . r ie de,"ehv reInshi6pa .ituPAy foe the st 20 rs"udi eoyo'sbohr bo Dean of' Students Carolyn Jontn will.serve tried to reduce the numb r of separate "offices" wvhile'at In195g6. Mr. M-urray odthe Sid otrsto fndvr in . Mroiy hsoter. n a bbot acomodtenhetewoa Althougl~ MrMurray's brther did no go to Andovr, Mr. Murra noted in aas Associate Deaii i te Office of Cluster Deans. English t 13e amli time planning oI~ oioae h evla letterto PAthat hs broher-ha alwas admied Anbver ad hadsevera goodinstructor Kelly Wise wvill go o sabbatical nex't year and i p d b increased size ad the need f'or careful friends from PA. Mr. Stott noted that the lack ofrsrcinon the trust made Mathematics teacher Frank Eccles will succeed him as' pann n dvlpetwr eae oteB~n it "th most aluabl kind f giftwe canget."Dcan oif West Quad South cluster. Abbot! Business te a it "the most valuable kind of gift ~~~~~ve c~i get. of restriction 1 all-PA Tree e xiisOe At Addison AtGlery P Polidy Commi teeEdss Three Exhibits opened on January until January 28.Ms. Swan w~orks Scholar at Radcliffe College 1966 67 r 1 T '".' 5at the Addison Gallery of American with oils to paint t interreact ion of' and has taught -at the Boston Museum ysteme -atz i u Art. 'rhey include a photography reflections to the surface of' glass School. Wellesley College. Milton exhibit by Mike Levins. a study of bottles. ~\cademy. and Boston University. liasre filei even ted~s bottle still life by Barbara Swan. and Ms. Swvan g -- id utat ed fromt In. sreso ietnsbt nth cllhster K adispl ay of wood sculpture, drawings, Wellesley College and the Boston An exhibition of' wood sculpture. 'December 7 and 15. the orfimittee It hoped that th6 proposed and lithographs by Hugh Townley. Museum School. Hr awards include drawings. anc4 lithographs until on Academic Policy ' doiused a system "~ll shed a more constructive An xhiiton f h lgah bhitn Travelling February 4 by H,,gh Townley marks recommendation thai wouId abolish light ~nthe attendance of classes. Mike Levins ill remain open until Fellowship. given by the Bosto niecpion of' the Governor's Arts the' entralized cut I sy tem. Te *Associ t Head'plaster Simeon Hyde February' 4. The black and white Museum School. the Pintrner Prize. Award i'n Rhode Island. Th6 committee t'urther a pro; ed several said. f~The recopiniendatioth was'the photographs include studies of dogs, awarded by the,[ Cambridge Art department o Art at Brown refinements in currlculu i1 format. conm n expression of our feeling and subwvay scenes. Association, and t1e George Roth University organized thle present and a+lpted a number of scheduling that t cut systlem as it stands is a Mike Levins became interested in Prize fromt the Pladelphia Print exhibition in acknowledgement of tle~' gIe neaimed at eas g orepc'uliar istitution from a peculiar photography while stationed in 'Club. She served as a Associ'te awr.. 'I COntli ts and crce ting greater time; time of Atrict regulation. W6 Europe. Following his release fromn - acad e flexibility. fled tat ilhe problehl is now beyond the service, he went to New York. T~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~he'comimittee's con nendation, it-in the arbi of overcutting. Le('ins writes. "I became more and. I ~~~~~or~~ce~ning - abolitioit of the cen- -Studeit' t tscfeel tha th cutsutsuuttbeeused critiques 1 of my work. His' en-. -~ j R-egul~ ions Corin itte and the the c . The cut system can only be couragerpient has been a drivingfoc -- AdCo ij. PerdbytI ecmitea flexibl and avoid the 'rigidity f for ne" -a repl cement for the present system ov'erc~tting if students view it as a Levins now teaches photography at -~ is one emlphasiing~ the student's 'speci ] allowance. Th'ey haveI con-" the School of' Visual Arts in Newv respon ibility to attend class. As f'used the essence of' it." York. His work has appeared in such- outlined. attendance 8f all students t The scheduling changes are in- publications as Infinity, Popular - all tim~s wvould be requiir . Students tended to accommodate the pressures '- Photography, and Camera. He has 'could tie excused fronm ass by his incurr d by next ydar's student b~cdy. also held one-man shows at th6 instructor, but only in ads' nce of that Associlate Headmaser Simeon Hidec. a Portgallo. Gallery and the Soho' Flass. r'Io keep ab~reast of the memb~ o' the coimittee. teeis that Gallery, both in Newv York. ' situationi, instr uctor vouId be these idelns svuuld help the schoos o'Barbara Swvan will feature a study -~Irequired to keep careful ecords and still exhibition - A Hugh Townley sculpture currently oa display in tfie gallery.reotusifaoyatndceo(otnednpge4 'y ~ ~ ~ ~

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  • VOLU~E 97. NO. 12 PHILLIPS ACADEMY ANDOVER 'MASSACHU~ETTS JN AYl,17

    Bronwell Ault, Andover, Trustee Hubr oSere sAumni Dire~iaor;Since 1953. Dies In New York ~~~~~~~Crawford Finbury T Fill Vacated Post

    Bromwell Ault, trustee ofPilp Aca:myU Inc2: 53, die ontece:bert28 cagsfrnx er ~edatr ~nsrtvin New York City. Mr. Ault was 73. Inadm eiso

    AanAndover uteM.Alsevdacaianof the Comte nte cagsfrnx er datrTheclore SizerAddison Gallery, and wsas an important member of the Educational Policy appointed Director of g Pacement RobertCcommitt~e. Director of Developnient Frederick Stott com mented, "Along with Hulburd to scedCalsSmith as Alumni Secretary

    among them the faculty Leave of Absence policy and School Year Abroad. Assist'antDietro ollege Placem nt Robert

    IMr. Ault had two spnis who Crawford and Ab~ ege Guidance Counselorattended Andover, and his gandson Marion Finbr wil u~ed Mr. Hulbt rd as co-David AulIt is currently a PA- lower, directors or the Colleg e C~nseling Office. Mr. Smith

    Yale Medal wvill "handle sme special assignment"fo PA whileAfter his graduation fromt Andover going into business- in Wolfboro, New,~ Han shire.

    iin 1918 and from Yale College in ,Leete ToRetire1922. Mr,1 Ault became an executive In addition. Thomas B. P ole will become ssistant' to

    with the Inmort corporation. an ink Commons Director Rbbert ~eete. Mr. Poole' i'il assist innmanufact rer. According to the New th prtoso omn nil h ieeto r

    9 eas o i ntrs nLeete in two years. at whi~ time hie will ssume fullin h p~of'dYale University to responsibility I'!?r the dinin~ hall.-Pu:ls he complete letters and Mr.PooeV s born-ind raised in Pittsburgh. Penn-

    o1s of' printer-turned -statesman sylvania. He at'tended Grove City College th~re for twoBejminI Franklin. In 1971, Mr. Ault years and theni transfered Ito University o Pittsburgh.

    reci ed the Yale Medal for dist- After graduation hie beigame interested in fodl serviceniguished service by an alumnus. management. and since the hie has worked "; th the Hot TO OL

    In addition, to his service as a Shoppes, Motgrjnns, resta rants. and hotel asociated anaget Richard iggs %vill aid Bilsiness Managertrustee of Phillips Academy, Mr. Ault with the Mariod Corporati~ n. He hs also dvstlie rgeNielson as A~sistant Business Manager.was Director and President Emeritus Catholic University and Harvard Law SoodingA ademic Servicisot'the Episcopal Church Foutidation halls. CrlnG di il iand retired chairman of the board ol Since Abbot Dean ol' Studies ~ ~ ~ ~ I~nstiut Lati and l RussianiaRoberbrt-Laneewill

    and retired chairman of the board of Since Abbot Dealt of' St dies Carolyn educedhis teachinghresponsibilities""too akeechargeeoftrustees at St: John's College o RMWELAL assume many of Associate P-leadmasterSionHds a, bver-all study of t Andlover's "academic services"

    Annapolis. Maryjand.' and Santa Fe BRM EL UTtasks when she assumes te position ofDa fte shas h irr.tNew Mexico. A~~~~~~bcademy next year. Mr. Hyd~e will "spendmr tim on ah teLanguage Lbratory. Rssian instructor

    A l ,~~~~~~~~~~-, f~~~~~~~~~i. ~~~~ long-range academic planniiiig and factyr rutmet Al son Stevens will scced Mr. Lane as Chairman ofAicademn R.eceives ,$ I23, l0-if t Registrar Willianm Bennett will go on eaeofabsence th Russian Dpartni nt'.next year. Abbot Assistant Deant of'Sunt James - Iirector olDvlp~etFrederickStt'tilwllb

    T hI~~~~~~~~J 7' r i ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Lvn~h will replace Mr. Bennett as Registr, r an'O will cha ged -to Secdretary 'the Academy. Mr. Stott willDionated For ~eneral ur oses assume responsibilitv or school-wide socia activities, diret PA's AeVelopme'rt ~efforts including the Bicen-a trust fun prevtousl covered by Associate Dean Carroll ailey. Mr. te ena Program. In alditicin.M.totwlsevasP'

    Phillips Academy has received approximately SI123,191.8I fromtatutfn Baildv will become Deant of' th~l1 Abbot Cluster. representative f'or comn~unity affairs and will oversee alloriginally' founded by Oliver Murray. PA '07. who dlied o ovember 29. 1963.

    Andlover received the gift as "incomie for general purposes.'I Mrs. Murray lived The Registrar's Office will assume - t e rutine not~ tat te cangel la ore a matter of nomen-

    on the income of the trust fund until her death-the mon cy PA received was responsibilities ofthe Office of'Research and vauto. catiire'' than a change iatnresponisibilities.20% of the remaining amount. Andover will add the monley to another hinld Director of' Research nd Evaluation Fredleric Peterson FewerOfie

    establihed by r. Murry. in eniory f his bother. IdnyM ury will chair a faculty committee on Research and Dr. Sizer explained tiat the administrative changesestablished by Mr. Murray, in memoEvaluaionowhiciwillothonridcrdndediret Murray'ecial ll.ilhophoeuulyy. bothhs ilifyookrwork andproperlMr-. Murray. wvho attended PA for only one y ear. worked in the securitiesEvlai wchil"ondeaddrctshspcl acnoatif

    busineslf in Davenport. Iowa. where lie lived throughout his life. Director f studies asiseemi %~ise." n addition. Mr. Peterson wsill take cc odtilte load wh h al suybstan tally-larger studentresponsi ifity for Teaching Fellowv seminars and related body and the Bicentenn' a Program will impose on us

    Development Frederi~k Stott noted that' Mr. Murray "~maintained a friend ly fclyii trests in teacher training. -c uigte etfwyar . r ie de,"ehvreInshi6pa .ituPAy foe the st 20 rs"udi eoyo'sbohr bo Dean of' Students Carolyn Jontn will.serve tried to reduce the numb r of separate "offices" wvhile'at

    In195g6. Mr. M-urray odthe Sid otrsto fndvr in .Mroiy hsoter. n a bbot acomodtenhetewoaAlthougl~ Mr Murray's brther did no go to Andovr, Mr. Murra noted in aas Associate Deaii i te Office of Cluster Deans. English t 13e amli time planning oI~ oioae h evlaletterto PAthat hs broher-ha alwas admied Anbver ad hadsevera goodinstructor Kelly Wise wvill go o sabbatical nex't year and i p d b increased size ad the need f'or careful

    friends from PA. Mr. Stott noted that the lack ofrsrcinon the trust made Mathematics teacher Frank Eccles will succeed him as' pann n dvlpetwr eae oteB~nit "th most aluabl kind f giftwe canget."Dcan oif West Quad South cluster. Abbot! Business te a

    it "the most valuable kind of gift ~~~~~ve c~i get. of restriction1 all-PATree e xiisOe At Addison AtGlery P Polidy Commi teeEdssThree Exhibits opened on January until January 28.Ms. Swan w~orks Scholar at Radcliffe College 1966 67 r 1 T '".'

    5at the Addison Gallery of American with oils to paint t interreact ion of' and has taught -at the Boston Museum ysteme -atz i uArt. 'rhey include a photography reflections to the surface of' glass School. Wellesley College. Miltonexhibit by Mike Levins. a study of bottles. ~\cademy. and Boston University. liasre filei even ted~sbottle still life by Barbara Swan. and Ms. Swvan g --id utat ed fromt In. sreso ietnsbt nth cllhster K

    adispl ay of wood sculpture, drawings, Wellesley College and the Boston An exhibition of' wood sculpture. 'December 7 and 15. the orfimittee It hoped that th6 proposedand lithographs by Hugh Townley. Museum School. Hr awards include drawings. anc4 lithographs until on Academic Policy ' doiused a system "~ll shed a more constructive

    An xhiiton f h lgah bhitn Travelling February 4 by H,,gh Townley marks recommendation thai wouId abolish light ~nthe attendance of classes.Mike Levins ill remain open until Fellowship. given by the Bosto niecpion of' the Governor's Arts the' entralized cut I sy tem. Te *Associ t Head'plaster Simeon HydeFebruary' 4. The black and white Museum School. the Pintrner Prize. Award i'n Rhode Island. Th6 committee t'urther a pro; ed several said. f~The recopiniendatioth was'thephotographs include studies of dogs, awarded by the,[ Cambridge Art department o Art at Brown refinements in currlculu i1 format. conm n expression of our feelingand subwvay scenes. Association, and t1e George Roth University organized thle present and a+lpted a number of scheduling that t cut systlem as it stands is a

    Mike Levins became interested in Prize fromt the Pladelphia Print exhibition in acknowledgement of tle~' gIe neaimed at eas g orepc'uliar istitution from a peculiarphotography while stationed in 'Club. She served as a Associ'te awr.. 'I COntli ts and crce ting greater time; time of Atrict regulation. W6Europe. Following his release fromn - acad e flexibility. fled tat ilhe problehl is now beyond

    the service, he went to New York. T~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~he'comimittee's con nendation, it-in the arbi of overcutting.Le('ins writes. "I became more and. I ~~~~~or~~ce~ning - abolitioit of the cen- -Studeit' t tscfeel tha th cutsutsuuttbeeused

    critiques1 of my work. His' en-. -~ j R-egul~ ions Corin itte and the the c . The cut system can only becouragerpient has been a drivingfoc -- AdCo ij. PerdbytI ecmitea flexibl and avoid the 'rigidity ffor ne" -a repl cement for the present system ov'erc~tting if students view it as a

    Levins now teaches photography at -~ is one emlphasiing~ the student's 'speci ] allowance. Th'ey haveI con-"the School of' Visual Arts in Newv respon ibility to attend class. As f'used the essence of' it." York. His work has appeared in such- outlined. attendance 8f all students t The scheduling changes are in-publications as Infinity, Popular - all tim~s wvould be requiir . Students tended to accommodate the pressures '-Photography, and Camera. He has 'could tie excused fronm ass by his incurr d by next ydar's student b~cdy.also held one-man shows at th6 instructor, but only in ads' nce of that Associlate Headmaser Simeon Hidec. aPortgallo. Gallery and the Soho' Flass. r'Io keep ab~reast of the memb~ o' the coimittee. teeis thatGallery, both in Newv York. ' situationi, instr uctor vouId be these idelns svuuld help the schoos

    o'Barbara Swvan will feature a study -~Irequired to keep careful ecords andstill exhibition - A Hugh Townley sculpture currently oa display in tfie gallery.reotusifaoyatndceo(otnednpge4

    'y ~ ~ ~ ~

  • PAGqE TWO The PHILLIPIAN JANUARY 11, 1973

    I i d~~~~~~~~~~~AVI E. DOWNS '--LTEAY ?VIWPre ident

    The'S EN SULLIVAN Places for, Learn-ing, lac esfo Jy~ging Editor HedatrTedoeSzrsms reet ok I elmna Io oDII tL!DTAM ~~~~~~~~JOHN TAYLOR HedatrTedr ie' otrcn ok neenna school, as a journalist a carpenter, a

    L5J~~~J~IILA~LI EdI N . %"Places For Leaning Places For Joy: Speculations On plumbereI dtrn'a and nm ynore equally diverse occupations.Americain School Reformn (Harvard University Press, He takes req en rp othe countless sites w~hich serve

    - ARTH R WINTER ' ~~~(1973) 167 .) will be published late this month, as John's ev"col! Perhaps he has hiked severalBusi ess Manager , Phillipian reporter Adam Lrner recently reviewed the days in the w drv s

    book. . Hopefully, heeepriences will accomplish twoPHILLIPS ACADEMY WILLI KAPLAN It is the year 2000. John a tall, hiandsome, intelligent goals. John le s.at the risk o using cliches, about

    ANDOVER, MASSACHUSETTS, SprsEio ad, is a senior at Phillips Academy. But before you start 'pr diorhimself and ho 'h*'relbtes" to others. He gets a chance-- RICH/IRD PITNICK ~~~~~~~groaning, this is adifferent Phillips Academy. It has~ to ~ck ouy f~kn ivn n ese h

    The. PHILLIPIAN is published Exec tive Edito ~~~~~changed since ou went there. Instead of the old, cen- world ro anIge~ltgte ukont i eoewel tHouhout' the sc ihooxe e Ed tralized institution you know too well, there',are now two Sconrdly. these _xperi n~ces at their best will bring him

    by the students of Phillips Academy WILL!I GIFFOiLD schools, each with their own particular goals. the ense ofjoy' ht Sh utld come with all real learning. IfAndover, Massachsetts. Assoyiat SrtEdor The first school is fairly similar to the PA of 1972. Here both institution Achieve their three goals, John will be

    John toils away at subjects that cover much the same' reoy to enter c bty as a miat ure adult. But how~ did al______________________________________________ ______________-ground as'You once did. Perhaps now they concentrate this get sta e

    7-u-I.' ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ mreo hepoes flerigthan the substance but trei Clouding The ssue ~~~~~~~~~~~the inevitable 'standards remain. He also learns how to o, DnSzr ok s not'about PA. In fact it doesn't~~~.~~~iouui~~~~~~~ng issue ~~~~~~~~~discriminate in a world increasingly foddwtavst ee eninuHow er, his reasonable and thoroughThe Academic poliy Committee's prposal t "ulirhinte te amount of knowledge. HereiJohn acquires power, in- an lyi fAnrr Ican hool reform exposes a sorry state

    resent few 6f the .problems curre tly~ ~ facingetudentspower. in a school, of relatively, traditional or aiffairsoand Me ch f sdyeough. pertains directlyprset ut system solves wothpolmcur lyainsud ts "learning." to Andover. "Th rei fcusmuch in contemporarymind teachers in the area of attendance. In fact h u~ ted revisions Although each school's goals often overlap.- the second education tproe 'y.A ng our institutions, few

    will caue conflits whic will hut studens. The han~ges ay lead portion of.- John's education might even have been depend so mih yo]dlso nd contradiction as dowill cuse coflict whichwill hrt stdents.ges ma lead considered revolutionary thirty years ago. The "school" the schools-n th nvriis a well, it must be' fairly

    back to a less specific version of the method they ho oreplace. ijs American society where John works as a police said. The committees plan consiss of fourma o cha ges First, the old assistant, as an orderly in a local hospital, as a teacher in InItemtn o un Jerstand and deal with the myriad

    regulations, and cut-Qhecking office will be aolished. -Second. at- 4.of c onfrovesies urrc unding American schools today,I I ,Dr. Sizer first tri t separate rhetoric: "What leaders

    tendance at all classes will be expected. Third. ji student may obtain atid critics say t schools are and should be." the real Lpermission to miss a class provided that he speak toi his instructor expectations of iety. and the "'realityk of the siools,prior to that class. And finally, teachers wlbe ca eled upon to keepwhtiinfchapinincsroswthhlde.

    careful attendance 'records and to report any u s'ttisfaator" at- . Dr. Sizer finds th ~~Dr.Sizer find publichep sblic asicasicylsatisfied.dcareful attendance 'records and to report any " satisfactory" at-The arguments agans certain school practices given by

    telance to the cluster dean.of the student involve .No definition is students, teachers. ad outside critics are "political%rneptioned for "unsatisfactory." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~rather than pedagog al"Fwo none proposed any

    sjrificant structura 'eiiosadDr. Sizer points outEnacting the planned revisions wvould benef t hers 'by rcng'ht scol h~Ve eandrltvely unchanged sincethe number of cuts. It would also reduce pressure ohinstructrs to the late 100's. Thos aruethat have been made,.

    make their clases interesting.he contends, ar cn ~ lybonout of proportion bymake their classes interesting, ~ ~ ~ Ithe pre~s. It one remebr h t/of the people in theSupposedly, the changes will make students res onsible to- their United State acrn oewa.egaged in education.

    teachers for attendance, and provide a prsona (and thereforee controve~ si that db exitse fa less important.edupational) method of dealing with asences. 1-owv er. the proposallhuhteIbl a ebscl stsidwt tencourages inconsistencies ~~'hich students ill i~id it hard to ~ * * * m a schoolssystm. iystdm, i andsnneverthelesshhaveiincrease

    encourages inconsistencies which students I d it hard to ~~since the Secon I~rd War. "Symbolic educationalrationalize as educational..Teachers will have var ing opinions of attentiqn was replace by a substantive ope," Dr. Sizer

    -ustsfcoy" students wihsxct ih be gIrd hieother notes. "The expectati nfs for education on.the part of theunsatistactory; with six cuts ig ored while pu~~~~~~~~~~~blic appear to4 be blic¶ipeingo' andistherenditer causeauferoroopfaculty might report students for missing one class tn im in his. Upfortunately mericans have cabghtEach clusier dean will also be faced wvith a decisi n of whom and th mselves in a ieb ot assumptions about the operation~~~vill a~~~~~~~~~~h management of schools which retard~!imaginative'when to reprimand for overcutting. If his policy var es, students Iill

    react with a protest that would eventually force t dean--to set a assumptions, even thobigh in, some cases blatantly false,standard. Iadhere almost 0~cha egd in American perception."

    Yet bigthis thtseems urhto be enisteadh wesadnw iol difference her orThe ateauthor dctonopriceedd to list nine assumptions:' carigo1) BothT he ~ ~~~~~~~~goals are clearly gre jupon; 2) Formal education isa

    cut ceiling. It would be far simpler to state just this at least sudents Good Thing and the n~dre you have of it, the better: 3)would know what is expected of them, by ohn Taylor Everyone up to a'certaln, age must attend school: 4) The

    For the committee to have ny success in creating a fair set of at- The year's first iss~c of' the Mirror appeared last ideaofl sape "puli Amcrican id ,a"Go oTi n)uicsten dance regulations it must either modify the traditi nal- cut system month. The literary-magazine, in addition to presenting .sho saethAneIca I n("omotAercsc

    it g~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ee-rall maior ipoementsoer ast gdithis, inrcludingnedo pge4or propose a more specific means of dealing with srces. The urrent generallyjo tieperprov etsoer an d rap is, inrodcsngpge4proposal, only clouds the issue. revised layout and format that provide an attractive and

    Ilexiblo container for te work of te contributors. SwMatter of Pride ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~The most important change is the addition o an .jby David Downs,A M atter of Pride e~~~~~~~~~~~ditorial'identity, a return tp a feafure of Mirrors of the yASamuel Phillips Hall was constructed in 12.Truhu thle early 1960s. Included aong te three' w~ell-written The best thing that nbe said'about PA's new comic

    I ~~~ditorial pieces are two daling with te November book, Spawn, is that ieally did go to press. That's nobuildig, thee is sort f quie char, a scolarlyand smple feling election, entitled collectively "From the Bandbox." The small deal. For evV an established publication.,

    that tells of Andover's.history of excellence in the field of education. first, a welcome relief from frequent' 'complaints of Eidolons, has failed to~ roduce a single is sue this year.The desks are old, carved with the initials of countless present-day general apathy, off'ers perceptions of the temperof the and previous attenmptl o launch other magazines and

    bank presidnts and buiness oxvnrs. Throug the old dors ofctheunity before November . The second is a rather 'newspapers have bee~ abandoned. Th~t a 50-pagehall, students and faculty have passed for half a centur . clearly demonstrated in the last election, one issue has determined effort on " part of its editors', qualitikstongue-in-he cktr pic aou tistica dievn "has Sne apear ed iso ie ro punlcte rd nAndover is proud of its tradition, of its age. Read any catalogue. Talk diie h onr nto hE~rmssbleeta eesr oisr o*iudpbli'ation,

    to any faculty member. ' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ve must have an immediate end to the wvar in Southeast Unfortunately: the dntent of the magazin& w;as farBut in September, the Admissions departpient nmov d its ottices into corner." ''Laer. whose distinctivesimple and appealing graphic

    LIthe basement of Samuel Phillips Hall, and now, after Christmas The increase of the magazinc'ssize to 8 by IlI" ;illows style has already won any fans on campus. He com-- the off~~~~~~ce replaced with a ~~~~~~~~the stati greater workability. ages are pleasantly plements his r abilityX with an original story_vacation, students find the old outer door to heofcrpae iha designed; graphic works, chosen and, in many cases, line, taking care no ~reveal his idea until the final

    shiny, new one. 6rcated by senior Fritz dury, ac often used as tasteful fr'ame. Hopefully, van iLaer's w~ork w~ill increase sub-Perhaps the door, after 50 years of use, wa sudde ly too heaIy or complements to the poetiy and ~rose. While editors Ted stantially in future iss~ es.

    impractical for admissions personnel. Or perhaps s meone decided Pease and'Kein Erlich dominate the issue, their work is With only a e', exce ttons. a lack of writing ability that prospective applicants shouldn't see it. ''outstanding: Ehrlich contributed t~o sensitive and finely stands out as the weake t feature of the comic book. Aw'rought poems, while~ Pease wov a very warm and, spaceman w~ho transfor s objects he dislikes into x-

    enjoyable work around the difficult and much-maligned r crement can hold a reader's attention so long, while the-Maybe we shodld replace the Bell Tower with an elec ric alarmi clock. topic of Thie Loss' of Youthful Innocence. Other fine unoriginal strip of tow -preppy gang wars sheds littlecontributions are, included by sniors Peter 'Fernberger light on a subject ailread& adequately covered. Yet talent

    - JT and John Bishop. Jesse Harris. and faculty advisor Jck does exist. Senior editor John Kawano,'s "If a cannonZucker. ' ' -ent o..."' gave a fre hI subtle twist to the age-old

    However, the Mirror w;as not without, some short- paradox. The Celluloid I ' ~~~~~~~~~~comnings Fo' instance, the issue carried the expected Drawing throuighout the issue was relativelyunt

    Th-eluod Jungle quota o:que~iionable poetry, with sonic authors relying tracti~e. Few contributo ~ ipae ny maturity of styleon the superfi ial ase of free form or intricate facades of and more 'experierdced rtssa efHoward and Fritz

    Twelve Angry Men (1957), withi Henry Fonda, involves a uyi hich Fonda imagery to obscure the pointlessness of their work. Also, Drury were conispicu slabet Add to this ais the only member favoring the acquittal of the dnett h ilm oers a because the board was experimenting with an ufamiliar cramped seningly ran ~mlyu hich included somestirring picture of both the strengths "and weaknesse oth mrian judicial t'ormat, certain stylistic inconsistencies pccurr-ed.These comics almost too S II to read and the rsult is

    sy~~~~~~~~stenf. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~problems will certainly disappear as the staff gains aesthetically unappCalinm But the atter problem shouldI ' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~experience. disappear as the, staff' ins experience.

    The War Between, Men and Women (1972) stars cam Awrd winning All in a, the Mirror staff has given the commiunity a What the editors munf' strive for now is selectivity.PA graduate Jack Lemmon as Peter Wilson, a middleae hlrartist whbo product that shows great care. thoug~t and rhaturity. Sophomoric material d trcts frm the more polished'prides himself on his unwed status. He later falls in love and ventually marries Even the most jaded Andover senior, eer particularly works; even this i5sue v ~uld have been~more successful

    TryKzlenko (Barbara Harris). No sooner is the' hney eon over when impressed with the Mirror in recen y~ rsol id i a shorter om h u 1 efrisen.2i o i:iWil~son is' plagued by a nagging wife and other assorted man aI problems. The now great encouragement and hope fr the liltueof the editors can maintai their pace and elicit just a fewcolnd is based onsvrlwrsbyJ'sTubr lieyedao at hiltsuAadmy more -well-thought carto ns, Spawn w~ill redeem itself.

  • JANUARY 11, 1973 The PILLIPlI' PAGE THREE

    Fac ulty Hfolds Disc'uss ion Bellizia Proposes New-On Andover chool Life Academc Department

    Two persons are being held by the Andover Polike Departmern c ncto Phillips Academy's faculty inet twice latThursday to Drtamav sunstctosFrancieizia thas prelese a to,with the thefts of eleven pieces of stereo and electronic equi ent o~ned by discuss Andover's atmosphere dd tlje' problems of ettv ugsi ocrigtepromn rsafour vacationing PA students. Andover liolice said that a ti person is still school life:' Headmaster Theodore Sizeri explained that AdvrThprayreomntinnterprt ,being sought. the meeting dealt with the cli te or .tone", of the proposed a reorg nization of instructors in music,

    Apparently, English instructor Stephen Marx apprehen don ofte school. Associate Headmaster Si ~en Hyde said, "The thardneadspchioteDprmntfte.vandals. now believed to be a former PA student, in the vicinit oBartlett Hall, meeting was not so much aimed a deci~in si a er~gAs lre Collab-74 iothe dorm from wvhich the equipment was removed, general discuss ion of school values." h eot u edta Colabormati n b pone

    The oners f theequiment ei~e otifed of the crime upo their return to Flaunt Money .Terprssgetdta himnb poneschool, after Christmas vacation. All items, except a pair f headphones Dr. Sizer noted, "We talked about hoN the faculty was choranro of fie erand aed fulmi stpartusnas hebelonging to lower Dan Katz, have been returned. jq working with each other and with the st ~dent b oqy. Also choraiain fthrurand aem o oideretTer

    *rhe police have charged the persons with four couiits of Gr itd Larceny and there have been complaints of thievery and mny in- rognzto l ek t rvd raebreaking and entering. ~~~~~~~~~~~~stances where rich kids flaunt their nloney. One student collaboration amo g the performing arts. Present in-breaking and entering. ~~my av n 80 tee i. i romw~ieth gynet structors in the Per orming Arts decided to work toward

    I V~~hitney Award. door doesn't have enough mone~ to buy shoes." dprmnaog zto o 937.adnhwvr'-4 ~~~~~~~~~Dr. Sizer added that the faculty considered to what that further study s necessary on the question of a

    French instructor Stephp~i VWhitney received the Palmes A ademic Award etnPAscm tiveaurwajdsrcierthr division including hie visual arts.from the French -Ministry bf' Education in, a ceremony bi the American than constructive." He nkoted: "Rath~r than having.-, The report also ropose tht the department thenAssociation of French Instructors in Decemnber. official votes, I hoped that through an ex hange of ideas, expand its curricu ar offerings while re-evaluating its

    Thle award, presented for services rendered to the French ct tre, consists f faculty would become self-conscious abo Icertain issues extra-curricular rol . t was agreed that extra-curriculara plaue gven n the decree of the Prime Midister and a medl eraPhlis adprascaneocaiy iw"activities should grpw more often out of curricular ac-

    lAca~lemy instructors have received the award in the past, n fding former hi *tivities rather than he reverse.Foreign Language. Division Chairman James Grew, who re ir d last spring. __________________________William Jones, chairmnan ofthe Fretich Depai-tnent at Exeter a o rceived,the -awvard this year. CLOSTO " NEWS

    Mr. Whitney commented, "This is France's way of saying h sto persons________ ________who have taught French for a long time. " Mr. Whitney also recie a lettdr ofcongratulations from the cultural counselor at the French E bassy in New Flagstaff PaondYork. -Friday, 8:00pm, 23 Salem StetFuter dean David Friday Eeig7DvidCohep, PA '70, willI lead a'

    Thoreau ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~obw~lhl acasinbgnersc.ss iscussion concern ng the juvenile court' system inJesse Harris, ~~~~~~~~~~~Hampshire.PneKolW s Q a Nrt

    Jese arrsa guest of French instructor Daniel Olivier, will produce ThePieK olQ a N rtNight Thoreau Spent in Jail in the drama lab, February 23, 24 anbI 25. .Cluster Dean Clement Morell will popsor several Friday, 7:30pm- ovie in Cooley House.

    Thoreau, played by senior Rick Romeo, tries to tight society .represented by weekend trips throughout the winter term io three Satur'day, 5:30pm~ Cooley Hous -- Soul Food din nerthe cmical figurd of his mother, Abbot junior;Rachel Graber. He is in Jail for cottages-4S miles north of Andover. Ac ivitiesrwill in-', ddnewt il~fo t als

    refus~g to py taxes that would support the Mexican War. Hsqe]]mate Bailey, dd rs-onr sinsaie n so~oigupper Stu Shofnecr, personifies the helpless n~ igoat fthe presv - rdy :0m lor Hall-Chairman of-the Rules'systeiW.The elderly Ralph Waldo Emerson, played by uppe o, Gillespie. and ~evision Cmmitte Meredith Price will speak andhis %~ifeJ Lydian, portrayed by senior-mid Katherine Bar y, love Thoreau e tertain sggestion from members of the West Quadbecause he believes what Emerson has written and is uafraid olive it. Suthi cluster dii rule for next year's coed school.

    Tl to-act play by Jer~ome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee po t ays Tholieau inone of his many terms in jail during the mid 1800's. Thiloh~h the use of frequent lashbacks, the play gi~es a glimpse of Thoreau, t d'man, and hisrevolutionary writings.Wi s aAwrt I

    Dale Wiers'ma, PA '72. recet became: the first Founding Friends Scholarof Harvey Mdd College in Clar'emont California Th-~y old freshmanwill ireceive n endlowed scholarship.

    Wiersma, vhlo will probably major in engineeigcite atics, is one ofsix, children and the son of a self-employed carpetr AtPeplayed varsityfoot'al o t~e seasons and was first chair baritn intebh Off campus.

    Wie aced lis President and Treasurer of the Chi a th Fellowship.He rcie'a, score of 800 on the Math LeelI C lege EntranceExaminations.

    * ~New Crew hellSeniors Dili Kauffman and Ca esne are pres tly I ading aud

    -. raising drivel to puirchase a n shell ordered rec ntly, y crew coachChristiopher Kirkland. Kauffman' explained that the newv hell i made of a light woodt and much faster than the 4 ther crew shells.

    An anonymous gift of l,000 has ?een donated, and th. schcoI has offered to* ~~pay abother $1,000 to help the crew purchase the $3,200;hell,'he varsity team

    hopes to raise the remaining 1,20byseinho chc cola o os n O E '* ~~candy at hockey games; and by se ving as aiters and bart( ders at faculty.

    parties. A raffle has been planned, nd Lesesne added tat do tions would begreatdy appreciated.

    NY Times Publishes Size ArticleUN

    Fvoring Futu re of Prep choolsSKCNEAl feature article by Headmaster devoted to learning" are many. Dr. COMPLETE LINE OF

    Theodore Sizer dealing NN'th the ;prep- Sizer proposes a stem throughCR S CO TR SK SPL ,s~hool stereoltype- of, snobbery, which re'sidential schools wouldmannered elitism, and aca demic coniplement neigh orhood-basedCLTIGA KP KE ,

    conservatism" appeared in the Newv schooling. In addii n, Dr. SizerYork Times on Monday. The article refutes the popular oncept of. thc etBs kiwas publishebd in the newspaper's elitism of prep-schoo b noting that FL-a ng Bs kannual edutcation review. the "'adroitly erry ed public (Official fteUS K EM

    Soul-Searching ¶ school districts" dra frma far less Weyopuyur icycle away this winter putdiverse cross-section of Amlerican lifeonyucrscurtykisI'sotnlwndfl

    Dr. Sizer argues that ~g thandopesco I exercise, but yot get out and commun~e withindejendently-managed boarding -Dr. Sizer explaibs. "ere is a ' nature. No. $10.0 ,tow tickets; no lines to wait intheoi ae pubci fiana cri i is specialneed for lively schools thqt are at the tows.foerc pre-shol tiania do Se cc~scienitiously dc td to the reTorm 'E -rrNOW YO C SKI ANYWHERE-

    freing sul-searching t c on-o teaching and, g eh the fickleness Y U At.efehir olsearcing Amrcn of public views aout educational Cross Country Skiilng enables you to ski right incerni~~~~~~~g ~~innovation, some o'these probably your bock yard. This is le6vel land skiing. No

    education. The Headmaster nlot, need to be un er independenit mountains to find nor to climb. A skiing revolu-is essential that the painful revie of ae nI.TeHadatr ih

    prioitis buwis andsucess concludes, "Indepe dence cani meanBecause the benefits of an occasional something, can ourish wise "Fulfl x~ience SiManager""immersion" in "a community reform." Jije D ve

    W. H. Brine ~~~~~~~~~ ANDOVE INN 56 Ber eley St., LawrenceBARBE ~~~~~~~SERVING PHILLIPS A ADEMY' 86-4743

    - BOSTON, NIASS. 8:30 A.M. SHOP - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~OPEN DAILY -9 SAT. TILL 5:30~83 A.M . M. SINCE 1916-

    * I.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

  • PAGE FOUR The PHILLIPIAN JANUARY II, 1973

    ,Review:~ Places for Learning, Places, for JoyPATuteBsNmneds(continued from page 2 changing insti uions will succeed less and less, for the N w R ~ b i P r y C ar n i

    issues are not lone o arrangement but pf attitude, not he is now preparing to accept, at thatthe shools tas is o teah th Ameican Way-which ones of socia ognztnbuof-cilnerction. ~aeytuteGogisin acincriticachitic Andr. Prtsat.)6 I ,.o~nztonbto oia neahillips Arcemty truste Gerg time preferring the United NationsLo ical ctro l edchainistc good Pbicschools) 6 Changing the tructure without changing the individuals ii~ a eety oiae s assignment which h has had snce

    achalunrles buton reisgo; ) uichoolsldb who constitute that structuire is every day more and more Re blican National' Chairman. The 1971.Cmaytahvle u o eiin )Sho shul bej forti er head of the United States' ramRlcacseparated from politics. dnelciv.If schools are to change, prep-schools should, be the de~gation to the United States will Mr. Bush acknowledged in aones to lead in~ the field of experimental reform. As Mr. rep~ ace Senator Robert J. Dole, upon atement issued at the UnitedThe ninth assumption is a truly striking paradox and Sir haione u narcn ril nteNwYr is~ formal election by the party ations that fie would be leaving the

    worth quoting in full. "Schools, conventional wisdom has Times, public~ schools will always -be restricted by co mittee when it meets January 19. rganization "with a certain reluc-it, are to pass on the inherited traditions of the culture. Tne"H de hthssrieaSchools are to make men of children. Schools are to relatively conservative public opinion, while privately- i Youngest Pilot ane" Hnied adeds thahs servicedat

    teach wha the parets believ and to pepare the managed prep~schools leave many oif the decisions to t uhi ftelt htw'egtauiu oiiatechde fow her hat the i parents beiv n o prsuae t more liberal dministrations. Mr. Sizer's call for a r uhi the', sonoftele ethtw'egtauiepliclsamldeo tmhols a tepreparenthe ougue Aor rethinking Iof o~tir schools'-values and priorities finds no Prescott Bush, who served ten years in1 ~,rocess" in he nited States, "andIthe aetmshosaet rpr h on o the better target han those at his own doorstep. Since thct Senate as a Republican fromli ibok forward to beihg involved andfuture, for earthly conditions as they will be notA they stdnsad hvseomepnedo Copnecticut. Mr. Bush attended l~opefully getting thers involved." fi-,estuens ndfaclulty vsedme s izdd oerst PilpiAaeyondanhsgeo oe t a o'r ie iwere, for manhood appropriate tp the future rather than coc n A~values, perhapi it is Dr. quzerst o ilp cdmad tteaeo oe t aemr ie i

    apresent time, for values relevant to the ine'vitably initiat disusson y carifyi .his own position.1 I enlisted for military service,: Washington to tell members ofchanging conditions that will obtain two or four o~ more -becoming the* youpgest pilot in the o ngress of the orthwhile activitiesdecades hence. It is assumed that the latter endsil be Na f I the world oranization that

    1 vi11 1-le then attended Yale,.he 'achieved by practices emerging from the former.' Ilk j eserves support.I I Pac uring, World War II' be flew Because of his lack of diplomatic~~~~~Beaus of is ackof dploati

    A, thogh r.Sizer hastens to ntout that W~the tl aiic combat missions for three 'perience, Mr. Bush's appointment has written is only a series of "speculations," his book is yea~s. He was shot downm rescued by is United States deflgate was notcertainly more than an analysis anZd criticism bf' the a submarine, and later won the In-eeted well, yet New York Tim"sUnl~~ted States' educational system. The Headmaster has D~~~~~~~~~is inguished Flying Cross and three IUn~~ed States' educational system. The Headmaster has P~~~~~~ I eporter Kathleen Teltsch wrote,set forth a carefully reasoned and highly persuasive air.das.'Among diplomats it is now widelyanswer to the problems that confront modern duation. i~, greed that what Mr. Bush lacked in

    As you may have gathered fro thehn prefaceale where he braign office training, he made up forreview, Dr. Sizer's solution involves a Structural hange gradluated Phi Beta Ka' pa, and built ~tin other ways:'" enthusiasm for the

    in the school system, induding the creatibn of " ~~~~~~~~~~~a sccessful offshore drilling business johumor a jeless constitution,i",academies," relatively academic institutions, and in exas. He was elected to the House ~nd perhaps abov~ all a willingness toL,.collegia," education that concentrates on the. in- of epresentatives in 1966 and again isten."dividual. Furthermore, he proposes a revision of finding , in 1 68, but two years later he lost a Mr. ush has two sons: Jeb, whomoiimal euanlsand ardeevsin oforethenation."o ose racl for, the Senate that he undertook gaduated from PA iii 1971, and

    minimal educational standards for the nation." ~~~~~~at Iresident Nixon'~, urgings. He was Warvin, who is prbsently enrolled as aHis basic thesis contends that no one institution can peiul fee h aepsto oe ee .'pnvide for 'the teaching of intellectual powqr ad . ' A ~l~' 74 P-1r

    dis ination, a sense of personal -a~ency"-(a belief in " itorsi e ea e 9 7 P tL oneself and one's. ability to "make it' in conterriporary'- ,''1sbciety). and the joy that' should come with all reallaing.His answer, basically, is to gile the first job to tiit n A t A To ath aaeis and the latter two to the "collegia." r. 1 Th odore R.' SizerD st bu on B g s AtJT da

    i s tempted to say that Andover ai pesent may be a Ihilyrc med lasFo erngPcsFrcla ical example of what Dr. Sizer envisions as half of IhglrePasFoLrnglcsFr FrmrPt ouiEdorAe traditional cover ge of sports andhis prpsdJytmo"hycdey". It isinot es ecially easy readi g nor is it something re Po PuriEtrAlx Irama. Thevlim asocnis

    one "cannot put1 own,'-' but it se especiallypertinent Dehboyonone Mna h t h faculty a senior portraitn looking towards the future, Dr. Sizer stresses that to t ose who are oncerned wit n dover's future under the97 yeaoo stlent itbut e toch nges~such as he has advocated will not serve for long, its e headmaster. One can onl~ wonder whether Dr. to hillipsA~aeysuet oa eto"Emerging problems, moreover, are not of a character Size '~philosophy will som e da~ turn into fact and an ooru{the 1973y itoprPulPeo thyermedkthat can be addressed 'primgrily through structure. The whe hr Phillipsi.Academy-will be the place where it all Tie 352-{page edition, a tedlyi rntn h tabotraditional American liberal response to problems of sta s ¶'tra icomedy in three acts," gives a a ice fo hs

    det ailed pictorial acqount of the 1971 - Fooperation; andtos72 shool year,' including events such cnetdwt h raiainasftirmcr headmaster John Kemper's DeCholnockyplcemuhoteHARTIGAN'S SC N O A W R N death1 and . last winter's series of blamewtthN w York printing

    va(alisti~rnks awelsmoefirm 'of Braduyelr. Lformerly W. R Hill r ,war'eva . s awelsmoe ,dur-. eerPHARMACY "Everything practical - PRINT G INC' li, Committee dorses~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Evryhig pacicl IC."''' "PHARMACY ~~~~~~~~~~Practically e ryhn" PRN N .4 J-tCY 'mte dre

    66 MAIN ST. ANDOVER 45 Mi. Street Andover ' uCOMPLETE INTING SVCE End To Centralized C System

    I Letterpr ss -. Offset' (continued terrom pagese) into term-conta ned, preparedt'ort in--the expanded curriculum" by courses, meeting fr three to fourallowi"ng the student more curriculum time a week. -

    'UJ ~~~~~~ ~~~flexiility, a greater' sense of choice, Commenting on theseWithut he limita¶tions of'- course modifications M'yd noted, "It

    26 Essex Street ~conflicts." was th6 faculty's i tnion in .for-I ~Tle curriculurh format wvill be mulatingth ieors requirement

    I ' . ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Andover, Massachusetts char ed in suclA a way as to ease the to broade th uclM. We feltr ive-h -ajor course load 'somewhat and that the' forcus qirement .wasW s- th "' re a lG ti n.II * . 702 eliminate year-long minors. To simply a maso flfilli~g thefacil tate the ffir, electives lacking diploma crdt n*ddnot offerof'ficl al or recdrded credit wil! be enough elective latitu e. We certainly,C o k e . ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~offeured s fifth courses to both seniors did not wish to or rk the students,

    0 ' KE N T P.and underclass en. These dlectives but that this has' oc urred in manyKENNETH P.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 0 C ~~~~~~~~~will inlclude courses in Art, instl'nces., So we felIt it ncessary to

    0 0 0 ~~~~~~~~~~~~Pho ogaphy, aid Psychology. The instiiute these no-credi courses which0 0 ~ ~ h o ps n yearlong minors ill be condensed miglht serve s nrewhat as a elief"0~ ~~

    HO 11NC1.,0 ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~~~-SI00 UPIS-Established ii 1840

    TYPEWRITER MODERN FUNERAL H N~E-SALkS and SERVIC;'E

    -' ~~~~DONALD C. LUNDGREN

    77 MAIN STREET

    ANDOVER, MASS. . 18 Elmh Street Andover, M~

    SALEM COCOA-COL.\ BO'l'TLINC CO.. INC. ~~Next to the Post Office Telephone 475-2072

    f J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- ,'I

  • JANUARY 11, 1973 The PHILLIPIAN PAhE FIVE

    HockeyTopBowdih.In~ OvertieI'~~~~~~~

    Safiirday, January 6; Brunswick, goal of the year his third game- i ts ew oeiiv ie thrusts I he troshMaine-Bob Wheeler's dramatic goal winn r. tied the game late in the irst period,just forty-one seconds into overtime and fred ahead with o tallies inplay gave the varsity hockey team its PA Takes Early Lead the niiddle period. Con inuing its

    sixth consecutive victory of the conseirvative style of pla , BowdoinBowdoin freshmen. The Blue had hd ake aneary 20

    Bowlin fese To B oin lead after just six minutes of the f'actor! when-the gam e's tu ning pointadvantagewith les than for minutesopen ng eriod, iith goal by occured.oAlACeggrscor wwhatwwaI -~~ golBodi

    remainng in he gam, forcng theWhe er and Gus Burke responsible appa rtyP' hr olnarsncontest to enter sudden death. for te margin. This, however, proved slapsot. tii rfrs s unownitto be elas ime at Andover would raoterfre~dsIoe t

    lead intil heeldr's decisive goal, asWih fv mnuer anngWheeler Nets Third Ganje-Winner Bowcoin mounted a defense which however, the rbomenttimi began to

    stym ied PA throughout the second shift sides.PA thoin wasted little time in and inost of the third periods. The -

    ?i, " achiev'ing a cherished come-from- 'Polaxi Bears had their point mech drop' rg crs .. FrRabehind victory. After a few exchanges back into the middle, thus clogging CegSoe..FrRaat the blue lines, Randy Koch~fed the up t e area in front of their net anolpuck to Craig Brickley, breaking prey ntnrtePAfrarsfrm F

    d~own the right wing. Brickley pene rating deep 1into the Bowdoin ired up by the prcd g events,fao ow th rih wig Brclypenetratedg deep into the frshznewondroigohir And over began to dominat the game,peneratd dep ntothefros zoe, oneGroingimpatient v~ith teradnarrowed the score o 4-3 on

    marking one of thp few times that the inability to moun an attack,, the anteBslsotbureges ietough Bowdoin defense had allowed a forwards futiley yt attempted to hoevrtegaloutdLsshn

    .~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~Blue forward to do'so, and passed the stick andle through the defense threinutesa la te at e9s1so thent ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~puck to Wheeler cutting' in front of inste df of passing( around it and third period Gus Burke, onassists

    the net. The latter's quick shot eluded setti g up the good shot. from Jake Bjsso and God e McRae,Linemates Bob Wheeler [91 and Craig Brickki [41 are the number two and the startled frosh goalie, and rade Bcwdoin, meanwvhile, began to tidhesoe ihhsseodalyf

    one scorers, respectively, for the undefeated PA hockey team, the advantageous Wheeler's seventh peck away.at the lead, capitalizn on, th ae etigte tagefoWheeler's. overtime heri IC

    Basketball Falls 'To Bowdoi 85-75 Brickley Leads Blue Spring~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~rikly eas lu SinBrian Burke and Gordi McRae,

    Saturday, January 6; Brunswick, Maine-Despite an excellent offensive tacular display of oftensive talent, nettind 16 tf PA's 18 turth quarter points, both recent additions to t second

    performance by 'forwvard Ted 0"Grady. the Ai~dover varsity basketball team .line,, round out the Bl1u soingsuccumbed to th6 Bowdoin JV's, 85-75. The defeat evened PA's record at ~ne - First Haltf Played tvenly leaders. Burke, afterastogpr

    *win and one loss, as PA had already demolished a weak New, Prep squad. 11 8- -f ormance at Lawrenceville, has four81, in theopening game of the season. While Ithe Blue was able to c~tablish a As the game started, both teaims were, ext emely cold, each accounting for 'goals and six assists for t n points,slim three point lead, 57-53, after three quarters of play, Bowdoin exploded f'or only 1'2 first quarter points. In thil openingq arter, Grady scored his only four while McRae has scored t ree times

    32 pintsin he fnalperiod to capture the win. \.pit f he' game, far below his season's aer ge. Both teams heated up, in the in addition to assisting on six other32 points in the final s~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~econdoquarter, however, and Bowdoin jum etoa three pont lead half go al s.

    time, 36-33.. Lcd by nine points from Willie R bisn and eight from O'Orady.

    Schlaefer, Grady Foul Out Anoe as able to pull ahead by a four poi t margin. This lead was amost Ail Ithe first six game of theimmediately shattered, as Bowdoin's 32-poi t final quarter quickly rtored te¶

    quarteL their lead. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~season,1lraig Brickley has e erged as Andover's fatal blow ~anme with five minutes remaining in the fourth theleaintBleIcorr. ith six

    when ~enter Mark Schaefer fouled out. In the first three periods, Schaefer hia' O'Grady High orer goals and ten assists, Briece leadsbeen the only PA playpr who was able to contend with Bowdoin's four it 2 lpinmte o Wheeler bys aopi sivnrebounders, all of whom wvere taller than he. Soon after Schaefer's expulsio ~ O'Grady's 37 points, which r resents the game high, combined wih2 pon.Welrascmidsvnstarting guard Rob Grady also committed his fifth foul, f'orcing him to leave't point against New Prep places hi ii firsi among his team mates in scoring with a goals aiid eight asit tacount forgame. The loss of Schaefer's height and defensive abilit~ soon forced the Blu total of 64. points. Robinson is second in thi category, combining a 20 point hififteen points. Scn-I e cienter

    ' to ove fom a one dfenseto a an toman dfelis ~vit a ful cout pres. cftbrt against"New Prep with 13 points in the I~wdoin game-giving him a total Gu uke trails Wheelr (by one*This press wvas unsuccessful, as PA committed several careless fouls in vain of 33 points,. Through the first two games, cap ain Tim McChristian has scored lpoint, nd he in turn i o wed b y

    attempts to gain possession of the ball. Due to these fofls Bowdoin was able t 27 points. %Vhile Grady has totalled -22, and MCormack 15. Although Schaefer Randy Koch. wxhose total f sevenconvert on ten of 14 foul shots, while Andover's only two fourth quarter free has only accounted for 14 points through the to peiggainh a e h ol ib i o h emIawtthrows were missed. Throughout the furth quarter O'Grady put on a spec- Blue defensively, hauling down 26 rebound~.~eig eh a e h ol ishmfrteta d~t

    Andover-Hockey CAptures ,-I,Andover ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Sports News BriefsLawrenceville Tournament -PE COL

    Saturday, Dcember J 6;throuighout the opening periods, as heLawrenceville, New Jersey-Bob turned aside all sixteen Choate shots. 'xeter (2.3) JV Hockey (0-I)Wheeler's goal at 5:20 of the final In 'the third period, however, he was After openingthe selson with two consecutive losses, Playing a eak gamel-botli offensively and defensi lIy,period proved to be the winner as the -not, as ounate, as Choate broke Ih Exeter basketball squad catue tqvictories in. the Andover JV hockey teaxii dropped its, season o nervarsity hockey team edged Choate, 3- through for two goals. The irst, a three games during nth ingswoodlIIvttoa't h Ste a JV's by a core of 7-I. Stoneham ook2, in the finals of the annuial power-olay effort, narrowed the score Tolirnament. The Red s~jffered early losses~ to the Tufts command eal in the contest, tallying twice to-leady aLawrenceville Tourney. This viciory -to 2-I,. while the second merely made and Bowdoin freshmen, s~uads by scores of 4-69 and 72- score of ~-0Oa the end of the first period.mdirked the second consecutive year the final score that much coser,. 70, respectively. In the K ingswood Tournament, Exeter IntescdpridSonhmaedwooeg s'that the eight-team elimination Wh Ieler sandwiched his game-winner, finished third overall. Int ete see cad tod -0obef a de wore upe ilBree setournament has been won by An- in b~t ween the Choate tallies, for his t xedi~alt - eol pe ilBree cedover. PA: advanced to the finals by fifth I goal of' the season. 'MutHro(1)the lone PA o6al. Borkeley'~ ~Illy came I ae in the sec nddefeating Belmont Hill and Kimball The Mount Hermon basketball team opened its season period, as Ped in a rebound over the spraw edUnion in the first two rounds. ' Blue Routs Belmont Hill, KUA with competition in the Worcester Invitationhal Tourney. Stoneham oalie. Taking advantage of Andov r's

    J' the first round, senidt forward Ron Crowley tallied 20 inability to i nount an offensive attack, the Stoneh insquad tallied two quick goal's early in, the third, pen

    Brian Brke Leads Blue - points to lead Mount Hermon to a 78.611victory over adde I br cr aei h a~ obidu In' the opening round, Andovey Tabor. In the championship game, Mount]Hemnion fell an7-I ahid cr ae i h aiet ul p

    TheBlue sartd qicxy aaint cmpletely annihilated elmont Hill to a big, balanced Worcester squad by a score of 86-73. agnCottaking an early -0 lead after 9-.Te lescrdehl ndotn

    Choate,'t ~~~~~~~~takn aostwcasmnshsonExeter (4-0) I-Jr. Jok (20just eight minutes of play. Brian kigkalot wieasmayshtsoBurke, who, along with Gordie goal! as its outclassed opponents. Displaying a powerful, balanced scorini attack, the The Andover juniior hocke, team captured its seco df

    Mc~ae, hadbeen movedup to the Wheeler, McRae, and Gus Burke led Exeter hockey team captured easy victorie's in its first -consecutive victory of the sea on. easily defeating the t.secondle, scdee oenin goal the scoring parade for PA, as they our games to remain undefeated on the season. In the John's. freshmen, 82. Center Dave, Silk led hfor PA, his fourth goal and eighth each' scored -once in addition to pnn otsteRds~ddwe h odi scoring attack, tallying a total f five goals.In add itiono

    compiling three assists. Brian Burke, reshmen, 5-2. Following this initial victry, Exeteris usadn efracSl losoe hat trtotal poin oftet~Ii and, Craig Brickley chipped in with efeated the Williani freshmen, 4-2, and demolished a in the first game to give him ei ht goals in two game s

    Rany Kchs svenh oalof hetwo goals apiece. w eak Los Angeles team by a score of 3[In the last season. Seve Collela also turn din a strong sefrmn season increased PA's lead to 2-0 ~~~~~~vith ame, Exeter won 5-2 over Berwick Academy. on offense.

    three fuinuites gone in the penalty- FaigKm llUonAdmynfilled second period. The referees the semi-finals, the Blue sk~ted off to Deerfi el d ( Vwhistled, fourteen penalties overall, a 5-2 lead after'four minutes of, the An injury-plagued Deerfield hockey tam opened the Jr. Basket all-(0-1) eight of theni against Choate, as each second period, and eventually settled season with competition in the Milton Tou amient. In Despite a fine 18-point prfrmance by center Richarsquad attempted to outmuscle the for a 7-4 triumph. Randy Koch led the initial round of play, Deerfiel'd fell o Milton Smith, the PA junior bask tball squad fell to th

    o t , this early.surge, as he scored two of Academy by a score of 5-3. The Deer eld squad powerful Lawrence Vocation I freshmen, 47-45Tother. ~~~~~~the irst three P"A goals. I he eventual rebounded wvell from this loss in the secon game as it Blue played well throughout t e contest as theI game ~wa

    Choate Rallies game-winner was scored by, Brian downed Saint Andrews of Canada, 7-5. In th fnlgme, undecided until the final buz r'sounded. In addition t4Choate Rallies 'Burke at 3:55 of the second period, a; however, Deerfield was unable to generate ayofnive Smith's 18 points, forward M rk Schiewetz tallied 17 fo

    he converted passes from Gus Burko;- attack and lost to Upper Canada College ShIth 31eChoate, meanwhile, could do little and (jordie McRae into his third go?;tp.-. h le

    against PA goalie Peter Anderson of the season,

  • JANUARY 11, 1973 *The PHILLIPIAN ~ A I

    -Ca~~endc~~r- ATHLETE OF THE WE KNOS A t R CK'Thursday, January 11 LED

    Colby interviews LED DSaturday, January 13at4

    Hockev vs. Merrimack College Fr,

    Skiing vs. St. Pauls-Proctor, 2 p.m. 475-8543Swimming vs. Worcester Academy. * J \T Wrestling vs. Chnsford' High . 30 park St. Andover.School 7 .-Flick in Lemper: Twelve Angry

    -Men

    Flick in GW: The War BetweenMen and Women HGE PARCYwith

    Sunday, Januaiy 14HUESPAMCChapel Speaker:

    'Rev Frederic Pease. Associate i'School Minister k INVALID SUPPLIES' LC RADIO IN AND VER

    Monday, January 15 _Columbia interviews -HmIelvr

    Tuesday, January 16 Bob Wheeler scored twice, includin Hm DlvrBrandeis interviews th game~winning overtime go if, vs.

    Wy January 17 Bdw~doin to give the PA hockey tam i7ts0 ~MI~Basketball vs. Emerson College, ahcneuievcoy 16 -MAIIN ST. ANDOVER U ~(Hockey vs. Milton Academy. 3:30 Ol.AdSr etrrsstSquash vs. Exeter. 3 p.m. -\% . quality,'

    Thursday, January 17 thru tfhs archwo C., creativeHarvard interviews

    Friday, January 19 -gifts & accessoT6s P rnes7 1Pn Brigo, nHaradinterviewsAN O E .pitr70piBrlntnVeot

    'MARY ANN'S MORRISSEY TAXIjBO KT R .CARD &YARN SHOP Two Way Rdios Instant Seri ice Olde Andover VillageOLDE ANDOVER VILLAGE JP~I eehn 7-00Andover, Mass.

    AJ.CAVZALLAG.,,,ANDOVER INNTH'ADEI

    GIFT4HOUSE-z'£nic e ~~ar~e JWELCOMES PARENTS,,, STUDENTS,' ALUMN1I Home of the

    I ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~ ~~~Phillips AcademyChair

    Chapel Ave. Off Rtte. 28 Tel. 4 5- 903 iMnSt 45-82

    Visit and enjoy

    I Q~~~~J]~~~ GIFT SHOP TI ~~~~~~~~~Cool idea: P.ps a In Pul Open, cans!-COCKTAIL LOUNGE -hIoinson A np.oOe-utlf n l:asc-iill quicker, stack

    INDOOR - OUTDOOR SWIMMING POOL ~~~~~~~~~~~return. Inside? That fan ous eps-cole tast e--taste that-COFFEE SHOP - DINING ROOMcoealvinteodOl thr oi!

    - ~~~~~SAUNA BATH - PAR 3 GOLF COURSE Iow, thrs a new ring t t'1 ioo!~~~~00 BEAUTIFUL GUEST Rooms 3

    SHERATON-ROLLING GREEN Ext3MOTOR INN

    L NA'S_ FREE D ivery To Phillips AcademyITALIAN,

    SUBMAL~~JNE Call'Before 9:30SANDWICHIES 47-62the others cold.. P POPO.

    on!46 Main St. Andover Op n7 Days and Evenings.

    P~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1